Cream - ReMasters Outakes and Alternates - The Remastered Collection Vol. 1-10 (1966-1968) 20 CD

 


01-Renovating The Blues [2 CD]
02-Outtakes & Alternates (2 CD)
03-Disraeli Gears Live (2 CD) incl BBC recordings
04-Live at the Fillmore [2 CD]
05-EAST COAST, SEPT 1967 [2 CD]
06-GRANDE BALLROOM, OCT 1967 [2 CD]
07-Live In Europe [2 CD]
08-Back Bay Theatre- Winterland Outtakes [2 CD]
09-Final USA Tour [2 CD]
10-California Days [2 CD]

The Rolling Stones - The Singles 1971-2006 [45 CD, 2011]

 


A sequel of sorts to ABKCO’s three boxes of singles replicas from the mid-2000s, Universal’s The Singles: 1971-2006 is a gargantuan 45-disc box set that offers single replicas of every 45 the Rolling Stones released between Sticky Fingers and A Bigger Bang. Singles that saw release over multiple formats, whether they’re 12" dance singles or multi-format CD singles, see their various B-sides combined onto one CD, resulting in a whopping total of 173 tracks, 80 of which are “not currently available on official release.”

Robert Cray - That’s What I Heard [2020]

 


Five-time Grammy winner Robert Cray has released his newest album, That’s What I Heard, on February 28, 2020, produced by Steve Jordan (Sheryl Crow, Josh Groban, Keith Richards, Boz Scaggs). The album features a mix of blues, soul, R&B, and Gospel, with guests Steve Perry and Ray Parker Jr.

Cray and Steve Jordan started working together in 1999 when Jordan produced the Grammy-winning, Take Your Shoes Off, and the recent Grammy nominated, Robert Cray & Hi Rhythm. That’s What I Heard is their sixth album together and was recorded at L.A’s Capitol Studios. The album has a distinct Same Cooke vibe to the music.

Robert’s band features Richard Cousins (bass), Dover Weinberg (keyboards), Terence F. Clark (drums), and Steve Jordan (drums, percussion).



  1. “Anything You Want” (Robert Cray)
  2. “Burying Ground” (traditional)
  3. “You’re The One” (Deadric Malone)
  4. “This Man” (Robert Cray)
  5. “You’ll Want Me Back” (Curtis Mayfield)
  6. “Hot” (Robert Cray)
  7. “Promises You Can’t Keep” (Steve Jordan/Danny Kortchmar/Kim Wilson)
  8. “To Be With You” (Robert Cray)
  9. “My Baby Likes To Boogaloo” (Don Gardner)
  10. “You Can’t Make Me Change” (Robert Cray)
  11. “Little Less Lonely” (Richard Cousins/Hendrix Ackle)
  12. “Do It” (Jack Ashford/Lorraine Chandler)



VA - The Complete Motown Singles Vol. 5 (1965) [6 CD, 2006/FLAC]

No Motown act of the 1960s matched the success of the Supremes, a girl group that scored number-one hits with “Where Did Our Love Go,” “Baby Love,” “Come See About Me” (all 1964), “Stop! In the Name of Love,” “Back in My Arms Again,” “I Hear a Symphony” (all 1965), and “You Can’t Hurry Love” (1966). Not only were they the second most successful singing group of the decade—surpassed only by the Beatles—but they remain the most successful female singing group of all time. The group’s glamorous lead singer, Diana Ross, went on to a remarkable solo career as a singer and a moderately successful career as an actress. 

 


Manuel Göttsching / Ash Ra Tempel / Ashra - The Private Tapes Vol.1-6 [1996]


In 1996, legendary German guitarrist Manuel Göttsching - as much known for his work on Ash Ra Tempel as for his solo career, with some albums released under the name Ashra - released a series of previously unseen recordings which date from 1970 to 1979. Amongst them, there are entirely improvised live recordings of Ash Ra Tempel, live and studio recordings of Ashra, with some guested musicians, and studio recordings made solely by Göttsching himself, which some of them were used for broadcast by RIAS radio from Berlin. There's also a track by Steeple Chase Bluesband, band which Göttsching and his partner Hartmut Enke belonged to before forming Ash Ra Tempel with Klaus Schulze. In other words, a series which deserve very much attention from krautrock fans with treasures which were pratically forgotten with time.